Education is a provincial responsibility.
Its also a continuing responsibility for ourselves to educate ourselves as society advances.
I'm middle aged and think back to the subjects in elementary school. Mainly reading, writing and Mathematics.
In high school there were Sciences (biology, chemistry, physics) and electives for home economics (cooking, sewing), shop work (wood, metal, electronics), art, law, consumer education (budgets etc), computers (dos programs on a apple)
Looking back I can say it gave me a limited basis of education, but didn't touch on stuff I learned from people at work. Investing, banking, RRSPs, mortgages, taxes, buying cars and the interest you paid on car loans, managing your money.
But most what is missing is history, how we got to our present day, technology, ethics and mostly the bad stuff that happened and what people did to change things. What are the current laws? Prime example on the radio there are the Fortis advertisements "We add a chemical to make the natural gas smell like rotten eggs" . It sounds like they invented this safety measure; When it is actually a law!
20 years ago when my friends started families, as their kids grew up, I learned how the education system was passing the buck on failing students. The system passed them on with their year group, which is why you see that today, a significant portion of young people can barely spell and or do math.
The question is what subjects should be introduced to better educate kids for life outside/after of high school?
Its also a continuing responsibility for ourselves to educate ourselves as society advances.
I'm middle aged and think back to the subjects in elementary school. Mainly reading, writing and Mathematics.
In high school there were Sciences (biology, chemistry, physics) and electives for home economics (cooking, sewing), shop work (wood, metal, electronics), art, law, consumer education (budgets etc), computers (dos programs on a apple)
Looking back I can say it gave me a limited basis of education, but didn't touch on stuff I learned from people at work. Investing, banking, RRSPs, mortgages, taxes, buying cars and the interest you paid on car loans, managing your money.
But most what is missing is history, how we got to our present day, technology, ethics and mostly the bad stuff that happened and what people did to change things. What are the current laws? Prime example on the radio there are the Fortis advertisements "We add a chemical to make the natural gas smell like rotten eggs" . It sounds like they invented this safety measure; When it is actually a law!
20 years ago when my friends started families, as their kids grew up, I learned how the education system was passing the buck on failing students. The system passed them on with their year group, which is why you see that today, a significant portion of young people can barely spell and or do math.
The question is what subjects should be introduced to better educate kids for life outside/after of high school?





